Hollywood stars gather for honorary Oscars event celebrating Quincy
Jones, Bond producers, more
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[November 18, 2024]
By LINDSEY BAHR
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The family of Quincy Jones was not sure they wanted
to attend the Governors Awards.
Their father died two weeks before he could accept his second honorary
Oscar, alongside Bond producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson,
filmmaker Richard Curtis and casting director Juliet Taylor.
But the Jones family decided to show up for the event Sunday night in
Hollywood for a celebration of his life and work with humor from Jamie
Foxx, a rousing performance by Jennifer Hudson and a moment with his
family: His daughter Rashida Jones even read the speech he had been
working on up until a month ago.
“We felt like we wanted to celebrate his beautiful life and career,” she
said. “His music has literally defined an entire century of culture
spanning genres.”
It was a moving end to a celebratory evening that had Hugh Grant
roasting Curtis for getting a “kind of Oscar” and Daniel Craig
celebrating the legacy of the James Bond films.
The audience in the Ray Dolby Ballroom was starrier than even the
Oscars. The event, put on by the film academy’s board of governors, is
also a de-facto campaign stop for Oscar hopefuls as awards season gets
underway.
Everywhere you looked there were famous faces greeting one another: Tom
Hanks and Rita Wilson at the bar ordering a margarita on the rocks; Jude
Law and Kristen Wiig exchanging hellos; Zooey Deschanel sipping
champagne; Brooklyn Beckham and Nicola Peltz Beckham wandering around;
Saoirse Ronan and Elizabeth Olsen deep in conversation; Sharon Stone
hugging Kieran Culkin; Jesse Eisenberg chatting with Elle Fanning; and
Jeremy Strong taking a selfie with Guy Pearce.
Others remained near their seats, like Jennifer Lawrence, June Squibb
and Angelina Jolie, who attended alongside her son Knox Jolie-Pitt. They
sat beside her “Maria” director Pablo Larraín and across from “His Three
Daughters” stars Natasha Lyonne and Olson. At another table, Barry
Keoghan kept making his way to Margarat Qualley’s side, squeezing in
between her and Demi Moore.
But most of the schmoozing subsided for the main event. With no
television cameras or band to play anyone off during a speech, it is a
night during which friends and colleagues can pay tribute to the year’s
honorary Oscar recipients.
Broccoli and her brother Wilson followed in her father’s footsteps
receiving the rarely given Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award,
celebrating the work of producers. Albert “Cubby” Broccoli accepted his
own trophy, then a bust of Thalberg, at the 1982 Academy Awards as they
looked on from the audience.
“It’s heavier than I thought,” Wilson said, holding the Oscar statuette.
Broccoli also commented on the importance of producers, a credit she
said that lately is being handed out like party favors.
They got some gentle ribbing from Craig beforehand. Broccoli, he said,
“cackles, I mean, crackles with passion.” But for a man who has always
had a seemingly conflicted relationship with his Bond era, his
admiration for them was evident.
“I can’t tell you how much I admire your integrity,” Craig said. “These
(Bond movies) are the most expensive independent films ever made.”
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Demi Moore, left, and Nicole Kidman arrive at the 15th Governors
Awards on Sunday, Nov. 17, 2024, at The Ray Dolby Ballroom in Los
Angeles. (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP)
Grant was less delicate but
infinitely funnier paying tribute to Curtis, who has written for and
directed him in many films including “Four Weddings and a Funeral,”
“Notting Hill” and “Love, Actually.”
“Would we call it an Oscar? It’s a kind of Oscar,” Grant said. “It’s
a better than nothing Oscar.”
Curtis may be best known for his contributions to romantic comedies,
but the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award was for a lifetime of
charitable work, which Grant said was “annoying and frankly
selfish.” In his acceptance speech, Curtis made a plea to the room
to set aside a small portion of film budgets to hire an impact
producer.
Nicole Kidman presented the honorary Oscar to Taylor, a casting
director unaccustomed to being publicly celebrated for her
contributions to cinema. In her career of more than four decades,
she cast classics like “Annie Hall,” “Working Girl,” “Sleepless in
Seattle” and “Schindler’s List.” Squibb, at the event with her
“Thelma” director Josh Margolin, said that Taylor cast her in her
fist film, Woody Allen’s “Alice.”
“I don’t know if I’d have a career in motion pictures without it,”
Squibb said.
While Taylor was excited about her award, she was even happier that
her peers are soon going to be regularly recognized. Starting with
films released in 2025, the film academy will give a new competitive
Oscar to casting directors.
There were many somber references throughout the evening to the
events of the “last few weeks,” although no one speaking from the
stage said anything much more specific. Jamie Foxx, introducing the
Quincy Jones tribute, did his own little impersonation of President
Elect Donald Trump.
“Why is everyone so down on these few weeks,” he said.
Foxx quickly got back on track to speak about Jones, whose
celebration closed out the evening on a cathartic note.
“He was really excited to attend tonight,” Rashida Jones said. “He
has so many friends in this room. Well, actually, probably in every
room to be honest because wherever he went he made connections with
everyone. Real ones. He knew how to stay present, to stay curious,
to stay loving."
Jones invited the audience to listen on the way home, to go for the
deepest cuts.
“There's an entire universe waiting in his seven decades of music,”
she said. “And while you listen, hear him, hear how he imbued love
into every single second of music he made. That was his real legacy:
Love.”
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